

The rules for IRAs inherited after 2020 changed when Congress passed the Secure Act in 2019. The new rules eliminated the opportunity for non-spousal beneficiaries to “stretch” inherited IRA earnings over their own lifetime. Up until this year, required minimum distributions (RMDs) and associated penalties were waived while the IRS clarified the new rules; but in 2025, they are in full force for most inherited IRA beneficiaries.
For clarity: Non-spouses who inherited IRA assets after 2020 MUST take RMDs starting this year.
RMD Rules For Non-Spouses
For Traditional IRAs inherited after 2020, the first thing a non-spousal beneficiary must do is transfer the inherited assets into an inherited IRA under his own name. Note that RMDs are then required only if the original owner had reached their RMD age before dying. Under this scenario, the beneficiary must take required minimum distributions going forward, including any RMD not taken in the year the original IRA owner died. Over the next nine years, the new inherited IRA owner must take annual RMDs based on his own life expectancy and deplete the account within 10 years of the decedent’s death.
However, if the original account owner was NOT required to take minimum distributions as of the time he passed, the inherited IRA beneficiary is NOT required to take them – unless he reaches RMD age during the 10-year holding period(starting at age 73, or age 75 effective 2033). Either way, he still must empty the account and pay the requisite tax bill within 10 years of the original account owner’s death.
In addition to paying taxes owed on RMDs, inherited account owners are subject to a 25 percent penalty on any amount shy of that year’s required distribution. Should you miss an RMD, you may be able to reduce the penalty to 10 percent if the correct distribution is taken within two years.
RMD Rules For Spouse Beneficiaries
A spousal beneficiary of the original IRA owner has more options than a non-spouse. For starters, she can retain the original account under her own name. Similar to the non-spouse beneficiary, if the decedent spouse HAD reached his RMD age, the surviving spouse must take required minimum distributions as well, including any RMD not taken in the year the original owner died. However, RMDs thereafter will be calculated based on the surviving spouse’s life expectancy, and there is no requirement to deplete the account within 10 years.
If the original IRA owner had?NOT?started taking RMDs, then the spouse does not have to take RMDs until she reaches the age required to do so. At that point, the RMDs will be based on her own life expectancy.
A spousal beneficiary also has the option to transfer the inherited assets into her own IRA. Under this scenario, her RMD schedule is based on her own age. This option allows her to delay taking RMDs until she reaches RMD age, regardless of the RMD status of the deceased spouse. This strategy provides the opportunity for the inherited assets to grow longer, tax-deferred.
For clarity: the 10-year rule for full distribution does not apply to spouses.
Note that the rules discussed herein do not apply to Traditional IRAs inherited by Trusts or “Eligible Designated Beneficiaries” (EDBs), which refer to chronically ill or disabled beneficiaries, beneficiaries who are younger than the deceased account owner by 10 years or less, or minor children of the account owner.
It’s best to work with a financial advisor or IRA account custodian to choose the option best suited to your circumstances – and ensure you adhere to the appropriate rules.
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